My previous blog post described how to secure EJBs deployed to WildFly 11 using Elytron and how to invoke them from a standalone remote client. This post describes how to invoke EJBs deployed on a WildFly server instance from another WildFly server instance using Elytron. We’ll refer to the server instance on which the EJBs are deployed as the destination server and we’ll refer to the server instance from which the EJB invocation takes place as the client server.

Configuring the client server

As in previous WildFly releases, to be able to invoke EJBs deployed on the destination server, you can add configuration to the Remoting subsystem on the client server to specify the information needed for the outbound connection to the destination server. In WildFly 11, a remote outbound connection can now be specified by two things: an Elytron authentication context and an outbound socket binding.

Creating an authentication context

The authentication context provides all of the security information that’s needed to connect to the destination server. For example, if you would like to use a user named “ejbUser” with password “secret” when connecting to the destination server, the following CLI commands can be used to create an appropriate authentication context:

Creating an outbound socket binding

As before, the outbound socket binding points to the destination server’s host and port for the connection. For example, if the destination server’s host is 10.20.30.40 and its port is 8080, the following CLI command can be used to create an outbound socket binding:

Invoking EJBs from a client server

As in my previous post, update any client code that looks up an EJB deployed on the destination server using JNDI to make use of the new Naming Client library. As an example, here’s a simple code snippet that could be used to look up an EJB deployed on the destination server using the new WildFlyInitialContextFactory:

Summary

This blog post has shown how to invoke EJBs deployed on a WildFly server instance from another WildFly server instance using Elytron. If you’d like to see a more advanced example application that shows how to propagate the security identity of an EJB deployed on the client server to an EJB deployed on the destination server, take a look at the ejb-security-context-propagation quickstart.